Men's Wearhouse operates in Oklahoma City, but it is one choice among several in a retail landscape shaped by the city's geography and the trade-offs between chain accessibility, price point, and selection depth. This guide covers where to shop for men's clothing depending on whether you need everyday basics, professional wear, or specialized categories, and what each tier of retail offers.
Men's Wearhouse maintains locations in Oklahoma City, including one near the Penn Square area, a major retail corridor on the city's north side. The chain positions itself in the mid-market segment: pricing above discount retailers but below luxury boutiques, with an inventory centered on business casual, dress shirts, blazers, and suits. The business model depends heavily on tailoring services, which is material to the purchase decision if you buy structured garments. Men's Wearhouse typically charges $15 to $25 per alteration for basic hemming or taking in seams, depending on complexity. The in-store tailoring window runs roughly two weeks for standard work.
The chain's strength is consistency: inventory and fit profiles are predictable across locations, and the return policy allows 60 days for merchandise returns with a receipt. For someone relocating to Oklahoma City or needing reliable professional dress quickly, this removes guesswork.
The limitation is selection breadth. Men's Wearhouse stocks a narrower range of casual wear, and its suit styles trend toward traditional cuts; if you wear contemporary slim or oversized tailoring, inventory may not reflect current fashion cycles. The price-per-item often runs 10 to 20 percent higher than comparable online retailers, a penalty for immediate availability and in-person fitting.
Penn Square Mall (the north side retail anchor) hosts multiple men's clothing options beyond Men's Wearhouse. Macy's men's department carries house brands (Alfani, Club Room) and third-party lines with more fashion-forward cuts and often lower price points than Men's Wearhouse for equivalent garment categories. Macy's frequently runs promotions that reduce suit prices 25 to 40 percent off regular price, particularly during seasonal transitions. The tailoring service exists but operates on a longer timeline, typically three to four weeks.
Dillard's, also present in Oklahoma City, occupies a similar middle position but skews slightly more formal in its buyer's selection; it is a reliable choice for dress shirts and blazers but less competitive for casual basics.
Off-price retailers (TJ Maxx, Ross Dress for Less, Burlington Coat Factory) operate multiple Oklahoma City locations. These stores source overstocks and returned merchandise from department stores and brands, which means inventory rotates rapidly and pricing runs 20 to 50 percent below original retail. The trade-off is predictability: you cannot count on finding a specific size or color, and no tailoring is offered. For someone building a basics wardrobe on a tight budget, the per-item savings are substantial enough that buying multiple items to account for fit uncertainty remains cheaper than Men's Wearhouse. These stores do not accept returns after 30 days, a shorter window than Men's Wearhouse.
Nordstrom Rack (the discount arm of Nordstrom, with a presence in the Oklahoma City metro) specializes in past-season designer and house-brand inventory. Price positioning sits between off-price pure-plays and department store full-price; a blazer that cost $200 at Nordstrom full-price might cost $80 to $120 at Rack. Tailoring is available through an outside vendor, adding time but remaining an option for dress items.
Workwear and business formal: Men's Wearhouse is competitive here because suit buyers value the in-house tailoring and return policy, and the price is near-market for a made-to-measure or altered suit. Macy's and Nordstrom Rack offer lower absolute prices but with longer tailoring lead times or no tailoring at all. If you need a suit fitted and ready to wear within two weeks, Men's Wearhouse's speed advantage justifies its markup.
Everyday casual (jeans, t-shirts, casual button-ups): Off-price retailers and department store casual sections outprice Men's Wearhouse significantly. Men's Wearhouse does not position itself here, so you are paying for format rather than goods. Brands like Dockers and basic cotton t-shirts are cheaper at TJ Maxx or Ross.
Professional casual (chinos, polo shirts, casual blazers): Macy's and Dillard's are more aggressive on price than Men's Wearhouse for this category, and the style range is wider. Nordstrom Rack's inventory is less consistent but offers designer options (Theory, Banana Republic) at lower cost if you find your size.
Choose Men's Wearhouse if you need a suit fitted and wearable within two weeks, or if you are uncertain about fit and value the 60-day return window. For other purposes, comparing a specific item's price at Penn Square Macy's or an off-price location first will often save money. Oklahoma City's retail footprint is dense enough that the choice between these options is a price and timeline decision, not a availability one.
